What bikes have won the tdf

Here is a question I have not seen nor could I find.
What bicycles have won the tdf?I know that the last 7 were Treks and there was one Huffy but what others?
Do any of you know?I wouldn't even know how to find out.
Rick G

Here is a question I have not seen nor could I find.
What bicycles have won the tdf?I know that the last 7 were Treks and there was one Huffy but what others?
Do any of you know?I wouldn't even know how to find out.
Rick G

Glad to hear it....even if it was in name only. My first bike was a huffy, only because my son wouldn't have anything to do with it. I took alot of flack for riding that bike. I had no idea why at the time. It was a bike wasn't it? If only I could have told them it was tour worthy. Laughing is good for your soul.

Between 1955 and 1985, there were many different "decals" on the winning bikes at the Tour de France. But, nine out of ten years during that period, the winner's primary bike (not necessarily his hill climbing bike or time trial bike) was pretty much the SAME bike: a bike with Reynolds 531 frame, Reynolds 531 fork, Campy hubs, Campy changers. The differences year to year were only details, such as the bars and stem (usually Cinelli) and the brakes (several companies competed with Campy on brakes).

So, Trek still has about two decades to go before carbon fiber bikes will catch up to Reynolds 531 bikes. And Shimano has about fifty years to go before the number of winners featuring Shimano components catches up with the number of winners who have used Campy components.

How many Tours were won during that same time period with 5, 6, or 7 speed freewheels rather than 10 speed cassettes? With toe clips and straps rather than clipless pedals? Friction down tube shifters rather than STI / Ergo levers? How about quill stems versus threadless? I hope these new-fangled gimmicks don't catch on!

Thank god I can still access Bike Forums through my manual typewriter and an extension cord!